The 15th Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival took place 19–22 September 2019. The programme included the Berwick New Cinema Competition that screened 23 works by a total of 27 artists across five screening programmes. The winning film
the names have changed, including my own and truths have been altered by
Onyeka Igwe was selected by the competition jurors Callum Hill (winner of the 2018 Berwick New Cinema Award);
Hyun Jin Cho (film curator, Korean Cultural Centre UK); and
Julian Ross (programmer, Locarno Film Festival & International Film Festival Rotterdam). The Berwick New Cinema strand featured UK premieres from
Lav Diaz,
Narimane Mari and
Angela Schanelec. BFMAF 2019 presented Essential Cinema, a retrospective series that screened fresh looks at classic works and overlooked masterpieces from
Marilou Diaz-Abaya,
Christian Ghazi,
Lionel Soukaz and
Djibril Diop Mambéty. Alongside the cinema programmes, BFMAF 2019 also featured 12 exhibitions that repopulated Berwick's town walls, historic buildings and town centre. This included a screening of
Cinématonone of the world's longest films (at over 200 hours) across five disused and empty shop fronts around the high street. BFMAF's 2019 exhibition programme included Animistic Apparatus, a curatorial project initiated by
May Adadol Ingawanij with Julian Ross which drew on inspirations from Southeast Asia, exhibiting
Camera Trap by
Chris Chong Chan Fui and
Fireworks (Archives) by
Apichatpong Weerasethakul. Alongside
Lav Diaz’s UK Premiere of
The Halt, which included an introduction from the filmmaker, Animistic Apparatus presented an overnight outdoors screening of Diaz's 485-minute film
A Lullaby to the Sorrowful Mystery. The 2019 BFMAF Artist in Profile
Marwa Arsanios presented her moving image work in two screenings and led a seminar that examined the different stages of creating a work, from research to writing, through performance and film. The Fantastika film series considered the many ways filmmakers have utilised fairytales, folktales and fables in their work over the past sixty years. Curated by BFMAF Associate Programmer Herb Shellenberger, the series was in international in scope, with films from Colombia, Georgia, Niger, Yugoslavia and more.
Elena Gorfinkel (King's College, London) curated the
Kira Muratova retrospective, the critically acclaimed titan of Russian language cinema. The Propositions strand included a presentation of
Aura Satz's work, curator Steffanie Ling presented a survey of the 16mm films of Canadian artist and Berwick New Cinema Award winner
Julia Feyrer,
Holly Argent's lecture-performance and
Rabz Lansiquot presented a dialogue between the works of Black British artists
Zinzi Minott and
Judah Attille. In 2019, BFMAF also presented a month-long, multi-part exhibition
Double Ghosts that featured the work of
George Clark in The Gymnasium Gallery. Exploring the status and potential of unrealised and fragmented histories, the exhibition drew together 35mm film, sound recordings, script fragments, photography and archival material filmed and gathered in Chile, France and Taiwan. == BFMAF 2018 ==